The carnivore diet is on the rise. But is it safe? – ABC Everyday

“Think like a plant,” Paul Saladino, known online as Carnivore MD, tells me from the confines of a YouTube video.

He’s trying, as he often does, to convince the world that vegetables are probably not good for us, and a diet consisting almost entirely of meat is the best way to “thrive.”

“If we think about this intuitively, on a high level, without going into science… plants are going to put all of their defense chemicals into those parts of the plant,” says Saladino.

It is one of her few video posts where she wears a t-shirt. Indeed, it is a habit among influential carnivores to appear shirtless, barefoot, and generally as similar to “our ancestors” as possible.

Another influencer, known as Liver King, who addresses his followers as “primals,” roars at the camera about the benefits of going barefoot.

Charging

“You connect, you anchor to the earth, [because] Why would you let your environment rule you?” says Liver King.

Content like this is the most extreme expression of carnivore culture online. Many of these influencers have monetized their presence on social media and sell their own nutritional supplements.

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